Article published In: Real Fictions: Fictionality, factuality and narrative strategies in contemporary storytelling
Edited by Sam Browse, Alison Gibbons and Mari Hatavara
[Narrative Inquiry 29:2] 2019
► pp. 352–370
The rhetoric of factuality in narrative
Appeals to authority in Claas Relotius’s feature journalism
Published online: 16 October 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.19024.bjo
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.19024.bjo
Abstract
The article presents a method for studying the factuality of narrative as a rhetoric. The need for such a method is apparent in the so-called post-truth climate, which sees us witnessing debates about semantic chimeras like “alternative facts” and “fake news.” The article arrives at its method by tackling challenges arising both in narrative theory and in fictionality studies. This involves developing models that let us take into account both the effects of local discursive features and the “macrogeneric” and “generic” frames guiding expectations about how communication is meant to work. The method is used in analysis of one of the controversial stories by the journalist Claas Relotius, who is currently being investigated in the forgery scandal of the magazine Der Spiegel.
Article outline
- Introduction
- What we analyze when we analyze narrative
- Focus on doing – Current theoretical approaches to narrative and fictionality
- Rhetoric of factuality
- Narrative factuality, generic frames and rhetorical devices: The case of feature journalism
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
References (38)
Adam, J.-M. (1985). Quels types de textes ? (What kinds of text ?). Français dans le Monde, (192), 39–43.
Arendt, H. (2006). Between past and future: Eight exercises in political thought. New York: Penguin.
Barthes, R. (1986). The rustle of language. (R. Howard, Trans.). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Davis, L. J. (1997). Factual fictions: The origins of the English novel. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Fichtner, U. (2018, December 20). Reporter forgery: Der Spiegel reveals internal fraud. Spiegel online. Retrieved from [URL]
(2000). Genres, text types, or discourse modes? Narrative modalities and generic categorization. Style, 34(2), 274–292.
(2013). Factual narrative: A missing narratological paradigm. Germanisch-Romanische Monatsschrift, 63(1), 117–134.
Gallagher, C. (2006). The rise of fictionality. In F. Moretti (Ed.), The novel (pp. 336–363). Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Harshaw, B. (1984). Fictionality and fields of reference: Remarks on a theoretical framework. Poetics Today, 5(2), 227–251.
Hatavara, M., & Mildorf, J. (2017). Fictionality, narrative modes, and vicarious storytelling. Style, 51(3), 391–408.
Herman, D. (1999). Narratologies: New perspectives on narrative analysis. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
Hollowell, J. (1977). Fact & fiction: The new journalism and the nonfiction novel. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Hyvönen, A.-E. (2018). Careless speech: Conceptualizing post-truth politics. New Perspectives, 26(3), 31–55.
Mäkelä, M. (2018). Lessons from the Dangers of narrative project: Toward a story-critical narratology. Tekstualia, 1(4), 175–186.
Mulligan, K. & Correia, F. (2017). Facts. In The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (Winter 2017 Ed.), E. N. Zalta (Ed.). Retrieved from [URL]
Nielsen, H. S., & Gjerlevsen, S. Z. (In press.) Distinguishing fictionality. In C. Maagaard, M. W. Lundholt, & D. Schäbler. (Eds.), Fictionality and factuality: Blurred borders in narrations of identity. Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark.
Nielsen, H. S., Phelan, J., & Walsh, R. (2015). Ten theses about fictionality. Narrative, 23(1), 61–73.
Phelan, J. (1996). Narrative as rhetoric: Technique, audiences, ethics, ideology. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
(2005). Living to tell about it: A rhetoric and ethics of character narration. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Relotius, C. (2016a, July 14). Refugees: Syrian orphans toil away in factories in Turkey. Der Spiegel, Retrieved from [URL]
(2016b, July 9). Schicksale: Königskinder. Der Spiegel. Retrieved from [URL]
Searle, J. R. (1975). The logical status of fictional discourse. New Literary History, 6(2), 319–332.
Sternberg, M. (2003). Universals of narrative and their cognitivist fortunes (I). Poetics Today, 24(2), 297–395.
Walsh, R. (2007). The rhetoric of fictionality: Narrative theory and the idea of fiction. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
Cited by (10)
Cited by ten other publications
Björninen, Samuli
Hyvärinen, Matti
Laukkanen, Markus
Üzelgün, Mehmet Ali, Hossein Turner, Rahmi Oruç & Goncagül Şahin
Chihaia, Matei
Schirrmacher, Beate
Mäkelä, Maria & Hanna Meretoja
Tang, Yili
Virtanen, Mikko T.
Laakso, Maria
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
